Alexandra Suda took over the top job at the National Gallery of Canada last year in time to see two major exhibitions challenge the notion of a blockbuster show.
Gallery staff expected the years big attraction would be the summer exhibition of portraits by the famed post-Impressionist French master Paul Gauguin, the worlds first to focus on his portraiture.
They werent sure what to expect with the fall exhibit, badakone: Continuous Fire, which put the spotlight on contemporary Indigenous art from around the world. It continues until April 5.
Sasha Suda is the Director and CEO of the National Gallery of Canada.Errol McGihon / Postmedia
What happened surprised everyone. The Gauguin exhibit never did grab the publics imagination in a big way, attracting 107,469 people during the summer, while badakone is shaping up to be a hit, with close to 31,000 visitors during the first two months of the slower fall-winter season. Its opening night attracted 3,600 people, the largest attendance for any opening in the gallerys history. So many people showed up on that November night that security had to stop letting them into the building.
Whats exciting and terrifying about that is were not quite sure what happened, Suda said during an interview in her office, an airy space with a postcard-perfect view of the Ottawa River and Parliament Hill.
The artists from New Zealands Mato Aho Collective stand in front of their monumental woven installation titled AKA, 2019. Numerous artists from all over the world were on hand Wednesday (Nov. 6, 2019) at the National Gallery of Canada for the preview of badakone: Continous Fire.Julie Oliver / Postmedia
How we managed to have so many people that we had to shut the doors for capacity reasons still defies our comprehension. People dont necessarily come for Indigenous art, and contemporary art is also something that is quite specific. There isnt too much of a data set to tell us that this is what people want right now.
The reaction to those exhibitions show that culture-consuming audiences and their expectations are changing as millennials come of age and the population diversifies. These conclusions are echoed in the findings of the first Culture Track report, a 2018 survey of cultural consumers in Canada, that shows allophones, those whose first language is neither English nor French, are more likely to attend a cultural event than anglophones or francophones, and millennials are the demographic most likely to participate monthly in a cultural activity such as visiting a music festival, concert, historic attraction, natural history or art museum or going out for a food and drink experience.
In other words, if you believe the only people going to cultural institutions such as the National Gallery of Canada and the National Arts Centre are old white people, think again. Canadians of all age groups and backgrounds are participating in cultural activities, and both institutions have been adapting to shifting audience tastes for more than a decade.
At the gallery, which moved to its current location on Sussex Drive in 1988, more than 930,000 people visited the Moshe Safdie-designed building during the first year (attendance is measured during the fiscal year, ending April 1), the strongest year ever for attendance. The interest continued through the 1990s, with just over 600,000 people visiting in 1995-96, and more than 770,00 visitors the following year.
Between 1997 and 2014, though, the numbers dropped considerably. In 2004-05, close to 400,000 people visited, but nine years later, just 237,391 people went through the doors.
Cornelia Homburg (L), guest curator of the exhibition Gauguin Portraits, opening at gallery May 24 and Doris Couture-Rigert, Chief of Conseration of the National Gallery discuss Gaugins wood sculpture.Jean Levac / Postmedia News
In 2017-18, the slide was reversed as more than 385,000 people visited, despite the renovations that kept several galleries closed until June 2017. Many were checking out the new Canadian and Indigenous gallery, which integrated previously separate Canadian and Indigenous art into one permanent, comprehensive space. It launched June 15, 2017 the first transformation of the gallerys collections since the facility opened in the lead-up to Canadas 150th anniversary celebrations.
Attendance continued to grow in 2018-19, with 434,834 visitors, a 13 per cent increase that was attributed to the popularity of the special exhibitions mounted that year, including a summer show entitled Impressionist Treasures: The Ordrupgaard Collection. With 132,494 visitors, it was the best-attended summer exhibition since 2012s Van Gogh: Up Close, which attracted more than 230,000 people. The 2018-19 year is also notable for the multimedia exhibition Anthropocene by renowned photographer Edward Burtynsky, a powerful perspective of human-altered landscapes that also included, for the first time at the National Gallery, augmented reality-enhanced installations and interactive films.
These attendance trends are mirrored around the world, and several institutions have responded by removing admission charges. In London, government-sponsored museums and art galleries have had free admission since 2001, a tactic that more than doubled attendance in the first decade. Washington, D.C. is filled with free museums, from the Smithsonians to the National Portrait Gallery and the National Gallery of Art.
At Torontos Art Gallery of Ontario, where Suda worked before coming to Ottawa, a pilot project was introduced last year offering free memberships to people under 25, and a $35 annual membership for those over 25. In the first six months, they attracted 100,000 new members, 70,000 of them under the age of 25.
The recently renovated Ottawa Art Gallery also re-opened with free admission, along with later operating hours and free child care on certain days.
National Gallery.Raven McCoy / Post Media
Suda is watching these initiatives with interest. While there are no immediate plans to remove the admission at the National Gallery, she says its an idea that floats around once in a while, most recently during last years election campaign, when the Conservatives made it a last-minute part of their platform.
The National Gallery does have free admission on Thursday evenings, and its almost always a busy night. Other ideas to attract new visitors include programming that makes use of the public spaces in the building, and performance-based events such as the Jan. 25 companion concert to the Beautiful Monsters exhibit of prints and drawings. The concert features the Ottawa Baroque Consort with storytelling by actor/host David Brennan.
Hired at the age of 38, Suda is the youngest National Gallery director in a century, and the first female boss in two decades. Some key things have already changed in her nine months in the position, the most evident of which is the relocation of the front desk from the main entrance, up the ramp to the Great Hall. Now when you enter the building, the first thing you see is an installation, the Sami Architectural Library, by Norways Joar Nango, which is part of the badakone exhibit.
That was my idea but it was really to make room for an art experience upon crossing the threshold, said Suda, whos now 39. It changes the dynamic from the authoritative transaction to an engagement in a conversation. I see a lot of people stop and wonder whats going on. Thats what we hope to do in that space from here on out offer an experience that asks that question: What is art to you?
It also makes the gallery more accessible in that you can see art in the public spaces without having to buy a ticket.
As for the Gauguin exhibit, one of the lessons learned by Suda and gallery staff was that people would have liked to see the exhibit delve deeper into the social context of his work, particularly during his time in French Polynesia. He was not only a privileged colonialist but also a pedophile who infected several child brides with syphilis.
We focused on the scholarly thesis of the show, and what we found was that people were really interested in that, but they were also, like, Wait a second, what about these issues of colonialism and gender dynamics? Why arent you talking about that in the show? Suda said.
For me, the learning there was that people are really engaged. They care about art, and they care about 19th-century painters so theyll come, but they expect us to engage with the work in a way that engages with the present. I think it surprised us a little bit but the extent that people were able to articulate the issue was also, I thought, really refreshing.
Eleng Luluan, from the Rukai Nation in Taiwan, poses in front of her installation made from styrofoam and wrapping bags entitled Between Dreams.Julie Oliver / Postmedia
On the other hand, the gallery is considered a world leader in the presentation of Indigenous art, and the current exhibit, badakone, does not shy away from works that address issues such as cultural oppression, residential schools, and loss of land and language. Its the second exhibition in a series that started with 2013s Sakahn, a groundbreaking exhibit in that it had a global perspective.
Nobody was really doing the global thinking at this scale six years ago, Suda said. I think were going to continue building that momentum because theres real leadership within the organization, and a great ability to work with Indigenous artists and communities with their protocols, and make this a space thats not just ours.
The gallery is also highly regarded for its contemporary art and new-media collection, which includes digital and video art such as Christian Marclays masterpiece, The Clock, a 24-hour video installation.
One of the most recent contemporary acquisitions is More Sweetly Play The Dance, an eight-channel, high-definition video installation with a 15-minute run time, by the renowned South African multi-disciplinary artist William Kentridge. Its currently on display at the gallery for the first time.
The installation is in a room of its own, consisting of seven floor-to-ceiling horizontal video screens set up in a semi-circle around the viewer, creating an immersive experience. The film depicts a procession, set to a lively soundtrack of South African music with figures that reflect the often-troubled history of South Africa.
For me, it seems very relevant today when you think about the refugee crisis in different parts of the world, said Jose Drouin-Brisebois, the gallerys senior curator of contemporary art. Its outside our comfort zone. He also talks a lot about the importance of people walking, and that the idea of the march is still important. That is very relevant were still a people that walks, both as a mode of locomotion and a form of expression.
Suda sees it as a great example of a piece that brings viewers into the artistic experience in a different way.
The more immersive the experience can be, and the more we think about our audience and the context in which we live, and develop a program that has a diverse set of offerings, the more generous welcome were going to extend to a larger community, she said. What we hope is that theres something for everyone, not necessarily all the time but that over the course of time, the program has a rhythm thats inclusive and diverse.
Continued here:
Shifting audience tastes are dictating the future of art in Ottawa - Ottawa Citizen
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